I just cracked the code on AI animation ads 🤯
every one of these cost me 12 cents and under 20 seconds to make
Gemini Omni + Claude Code is f*cking wild.
i built a system that turns any product into an end-to-end AI animated ad in ANY style you want.. claymation, pixar-style 3D, anime, paper cutout, lego, you name it
you drop in your product photo and a one line pitch and it handles everything end to end. images, video, voiceover, music, captions, all generated with AI inside Claude..
AI animation ads are crushing on Meta right now and everyone still assumes you need an expensive editor with a 3-week turnaround time to make one. you don't. you just need the right workflow.
Im making full end to end high quality AI animation ads in under 3 minutes with this system
and they work just as hard organically on TikTok, reels and shorts
so i packaged the whole thing up…
here's what you're getting:
> every prompt i used across all 8 steps
> the exact tool stack + the order to run it in
> style recipes for claymation, pixar, anime, wes anderson, retro cartoon + CGI
> one system that works for paid Meta AND organic
built across Claude Code and Gemini Omni
RT + reply 'STYLES' and i'll send it over (must be following so i can dm)
i should never be sharing this but f*ck it
seedance 2.0 + claude code + tiktok is THE best combo for AI videos
i cracked the formula for generating videos that look hyper realistic & make your audience feel like "holy shit this person gets me"
i'm finally sharing my FULL system with you..
here's what you're getting:
- my prompting method for realistic voices (works every time)
- my realistic human movements & breathing claude skill (this is key for realistic videos)
- my exact method on how to make infinite length videos that maintain consistency
- how to get AI tools for dirt cheap (90% off)
RT + reply 'UGC' and i'll send you the step-by-step system (must follow so i can dm)
You historically illiterate, crown-kissing, sovereignty-eroding simpletons peddling this insipid royalist drivel:
Magna Carta does not fucking apply to the United States of America.
Not one goddamn clause. Not in 1215, not in 1776, and sure as hell not in 2026 while some inbred Windsorian monarch lectures our Congress like we’re still colonial tenants.
Jesus fucking Christ, get it right or get the fuck out of the conversation.
We bled for independence precisely to reject that feudal English parchment.
The Declaration of Independence was our lethal severance notice:
no more divine-right kings, no more baronial compromises dressed up as liberty. Our Founders studied it, sure...Jefferson, Madison, Hamilton cherry-picked the due-process DNA and habeas corpus lineage from English common law as raw material...but they forged it into something revolutionary, not derivative.
Influence is not application. Pedigree is not jurisdiction.
Precision, motherfuckers.
Legally, it’s ironclad and non-negotiable.
Article VI of the U.S. Constitution declares this document the supreme Law of the Land.
Magna Carta?
A 13th-century domestic English charter between a weak Plantagenet king and his pissed-off barons.
It has never been ratified by the U.S. Senate, never embodied in any treaty under Article II, never incorporated by statute, and never elevated to customary international law binding a sovereign republic that explicitly repudiated British subjecthood.
Zero positive-law force here. The Supreme Court has nodded to it in over 160 opinions since 1789...Hurtado v. California, Murray’s Lessee, the whole due-process canon...but every single reference is historical illustration, not binding precedent.
It’s rhetorical ancestry, like quoting the Code of Hammurabi in a property dispute. Persuasive at best, ornamental at worst. Cite it all day; it still doesn’t cross the Atlantic as enforceable edict.
International law angle? Laughable.
The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties doesn’t apply because this isn’t a treaty...it’s a foreign domestic artifact.
Customary international law requires widespread state practice and opinio juris; no nation on Earth treats a medieval English charter as binding on third-party republics.
The U.S. isn’t a successor state to the Crown; we’re the rejection of it. Any attempt to imply continuity is soft-power gaslighting, pure and simple.
And here’s the psychological venom that makes this shit lethal:
King Charles’s little Runnymede cosplay in the House chamber wasn’t innocent nostalgia. It was elite psychological operations 101...deliberate cognitive anchoring.
Plant the seed that American liberty is an offshoot of British royal benevolence, erode the psychic rupture of 1776, soften the national ego into a warm bath of “shared heritage.”
It’s the same globalist playbook every time:
dilute sovereignty through implied continuity, romanticize the Crown while our own founding documents scream otherwise.
They want you nodding along to the standing ovation because it feels cultured, feels connected, feels safe.
Fuck that.
It’s submission disguised as sophistication.
The venom is in the implication that we still owe some ancestral debt to a document born under a sword at Runnymede.
Our rights don’t flow from a king’s reluctant concession to his barons. They derive from Nature and Nature’s God, secured by our blood, codified in our Constitution, and defended by our courts and arms.
Full stop.
Magna Carta can sit in its glass case in London and rot for all we care. It has no jurisdiction here, no authority here, no relevance here beyond dusty academic footnotes.
Influence is not application.
Heritage is not hierarchy.
And nostalgia is not law.
Get it right, or choke on the distinction, you historically illiterate royalist fucks.
And get a better goddamn education before you vomit your bullshit forth on my timeline.
💀🗡️⚖️
Everybody needs to read this - these new revelations legitimately completely transform our historical understanding of Richard Nixon.
Nixon basically had conclusive proof that the Joint Chiefs of Staff systematically spied on him and attempted to undermine him as part of a right wing plot against his government.
If he had publicised this world-historic scandal during Watergate, he might have actually rallied enough support with the public to save his Presidency. His paranoia and sense of being under constant siege was much mocked at the time, but these revelations show that he actually had good reason to feel this way.
But rather than publicise this extraordinary scandal, Nixon decided to go to his grave with the secret, solely to protect the honour and integrity of the US armed forces and America's international reputation for democracy during the Cold War.
We are only learning about it now, 32 years after his death.
Nixon was such a good man. Far from being ''a crook,'' he is perhaps one of the most honourable men to ever be President.